'Secret Santas' Spread Holiday Cheer With Generosity

Sometimes all it takes is one random act of kindness to make someone's holiday season infinitely brighter.

Around the country, anonymous men and women find ways big and small to help out people in need. These "Secret Santas" and "Guardian Angels" spend money and time on helping others and ask for nothing in return.

A wealthy Missouri man giving away $100,000 for the holidays traveled to New York and New Jersey to distribute hundred dollar bills to people who suffered from superstorm Sandy.

The Secret Santa refused to give his name, but surprised residents, shoppers and volunteers in the two states with money in hand. He sported a red beret with "elf" stitched on the back in green.

"Are you serious?" asked one surprised shopper when he handed her a $100 bill.

"I'm serious. Merry Christmas," he said. "See if you can't do a little bit more shopping today. Buy something a little bit more than what you would have bought before, all right? Just kind of pass the kindness on down the road."

The woman hugged the generous benefactor and cried into his shoulder.

The man was trailed by New York and New Jersey police officers and FBI agents. Some sported the same "elf" berets, according to the Associated Press.

"The money is not the point at all," he told the AP during a stop in Staten Island. "It's about the random acts of kindness. I'm just setting an example, and if 10 percent of the people who see me emulate what I'm doing, anybody can be a Secret Santa."

ABCNEWS.com

Anonymous Donor Pays for Family's Layaway Gifts

A North Carolina family of five will be having a merry Christmas, thanks to a kind act from an anonymous donor.

When Cameron Longenecker of Grantsboro, N.C., went to Walmart to pay a layaway bill, he was shocked to find that the $389.15 bill had been paid in full.

The family had been trying to decide which bills they would skip this month in order to pay for the Christmas gifts for their three children.

Hicks tried to tell the man she couldn't accept the money, but he turned around and left the store.

"I wanted to thank him. I was so stunned I didn't know what to say at the time," she said. "The way he smiled at me, he was a great man. I just stood there crying. I didn't know what to do."

Hicks called her mother to tell her what happened and her mother told her the man was her guardian angel. The family had been struggling financially.

"Times are tough for everyone right now and it just, it really helped out," Hicks said. "I can't explain it, the look in his eyes. Something about him...it was great."

ABCNEWS.com

Annual Secret Santas Leaves Big Donations in Salvation Army Kettles

A string of secret Santas in Tennessee have made a tradition of brightening the holiday season with generous donations to the Salvation Army.

For the past five or six years, secret Santas have deposited wads of $100 bills into Salvation Army red kettles.

"We have the best secret Santas," Kimberly Kyriakidis George, director of marketing and development for the Greater Chattanooga Salvation Army, told ABCNews.com.

On Dec. 4, an anonymous donor dropped 48 $100 bills in the kettle outside of a K-Mart in Fort Oglethorpe. The week before, a wad of 37 $100 bills were dropped into the same kettle. Three other wads have also been dropped in the kettle.

The bundle of 48 bills had a note attached that said, "Please give and give generously. May the peace of Christ be with you. SS"

"We never know when they're going to be, we never know where they're going to be and we hate to expect them now, but we're surprised every year and the surprise is just as sweet," George said.

George said that the donations have placed the Salvation Army chapter at nearly the 70 percent mark of this year's red kettle goal.

She wants to extend "a big thank you" to the anonymous benefactors.

"It's exciting. To me, it's the ultimate example of generosity because it's anonymous," she said. "Not only is it anonymous, they're not wanting any kind of tax credit on it. For somebody to be that generous and not even want any kind of credit for it is amazing to me."

"Secret Santa fever is going strong in the Tennessee Valley," George said with a laugh.

ABCNEWS.com

Good Samaritan Pays Off 35 Layaway Bills in Mississippi

Thirty-five Mississippi families were treated to a quite a surprise when they found out that their Walmart layaways had been paid off by a good samaritan.

"Thank you, Jesus, because I didn't know how I was going to do it," Likedria Kemp told ABC News' South Mississippi affiliate WLOX. "I went on a whim and I [put items on layaway] hoping I could pay it off on time, so it was just a big, big surprise for me and it was such a blessing."

Kemp is a mother of two young girls who broke into tears and started screaming when she found out the bill had been paid off by an anonymous female donor.

"It's a feeling like no other to know they will have that satisfaction and can share things that other kids normally do," she said.

Diane Young was also emotional about finding out that the gifts she had hoped to buy for her 3-year-old grandson were taken care of.

"To do this for someone she has never met, no words can even describe it," Young told WLOX. "I was just blown away. It just came at a really good time for me in my life right now."

Both women were so touched by the kindness that it motivated them to pay it forward. Young paid for a Spiderman bike for another little boy and Kemp was also feeling the contagious generosity.

"I decided I might put something else on someone else's layaway [with] the money that I did save," she said.

The women also wanted to express their gratitude to the secret Santa.

"Thank you so much from the bottom of my heart and my family's," Young said. "For you to take the time and pay someone else's layaway without even meeting the person, you are an angel. And I wish I could hug you and tell you thank you and God bless."